Monograph
(forthcoming) Penny Dreadfuls: The Circulation Patterns of a Victorian Popular Literature. Anthem Press, 2025.
Journal articles
- “‘Useful Knowledge’ versus ‘Wastes of Print’: Working-Class Education and Edward Lloyd”. Victorian Popular Fictions Journal 3.1 (Spring 2021): 123-139. Double-blind peer-reviewed. https://doi.org/10.46911/QODX5600
- “‘Attend the Tale of Sweeney Todd’: The Transmedial Circulation of a Victorian Narrative”. Polysèmes “Contemporary Victoriana” 23 | 2020. Double-blind peer-reviewed.
https://doi.org/10.4000/polysemes.6781
Book chapters
- “‘Embalmed pestilence’, ‘intoxicating poisons’: Rhetoric of contamination, contagion, and the Gothic marginalisation of penny dreadfuls by their contemporary critics”. In Nicole C. Dittmer and Sophie Raine (Eds), Penny Dreadfuls and the Gothic: Investigations of Pernicious Tales of Terror. University of Wales Press, 2023, pp. 91-113.
- “‘Lost, as it were, from amidst the assemblage of my literary productions’: Authorial agency from scissors-and-paste to remix in Reynolds’s translations”. Co-authored with Marie Léger-St-Jean. In Jennifer Conary and Mary Shannon (Eds), Reynolds Reimagined: Studies in Authorship, Radicalism, and Genre, 1830-1870. Routledge, 2023, pp. 52-81.
Editing work
- (forthcoming) Co-editor of “Poison(s) and Poisoning in Nineteenth-Century Popular Fiction,” a special issue of Victorian Popular Fictions Journal (Autumn 2026), with Sarah Frühwirth. CFP available here!
- Editor of Spectral Sounds: Unquiet Tales of Acoustic Weird (British Library Publishing, 2022). The volume belongs to the Tales of the Weird series.
- Managing editor of Encyclopedia of London’s East End (McFarland, 2023), edited by Kevin A. Morrison.
- Co-editor of “More than Meets the Ear: Sound & Short Fiction“, a special issue of Short Fiction in Theory & Practice (Vol 11, n°1 & 2, July 2021), with Sylvia Mieszkowski and Harald Freidl.
Entries in reference works
- In Encyclopedia of London’s East End, edited by Kevin A. Morrison. McFarland, 2023.
- “Bazalgette, Joseph” (pp. 21-22)
- “Billingsgate Fish Market” (pp. 27-28)
- “Camberton, Roland” (p. 46)
- “Columbia Market” (pp. 56-57)
- “Docklands & East London Advertiser” (p. 68)
- “Dustmen” (pp. 70-71)
- “East End Women’s Museum” (p. 73)
- “The Gherkin” (p. 91)
- “Globe Town” (p. 94)
- “Lipski, Israel” (pp. 133-134)
- “Mitre Square” (pp. 156-157)
- “Royal Victoria Gardens” (pp. 198-199)
- “Seven Curses of London” (p. 206)
- “Tate & Lyle Sugars” (p. 226)
- “Thames Barrier Park” (p. 227)
- “The Tower of London” (p. 232)
- In The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Victorian Women’s Writing, edited by Lesa Scholl. Living edition.
- “Penny bloods and penny dreadfuls” (2021). https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-3-030-02721-6_448-1
- “Sewell, Mary” (2021). https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-3-030-02721-6_447-1
Book reviews
- (forthcoming) Review of Gothic Chapbooks, Bluebooks and Shilling Shockers, 1797–1830 (2021) by Franz J. Potter. Revenant Journal.
- Review of Nineteenth-Century Popular Fiction, Medicine and Anatomy: The Victorian Penny Blood and the 1832 Anatomy Act (2019) by Anna Gasperini. The Wilkie Collins Journal issue 19 (2021).